Rumpole: The Penge Bungalow Murders and Other Stories: Three BBC Radio 4 dramatisations

Benedict Cumberbatch plays the young, feisty, devastatingly acute Horace Rumpole in this collection of cracking cases, also starring Timothy West as the older Rumpole. Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders: It is the '50s, and two war heroes have been shot dead. Defending the suspect is deemed hopeless, so the case is handed to a novice. But the novice's superiors didn't count on the tenacity and wit of the young and hungry Horace Rumpole.

A Man Lay Dead

Wealthy Sir Hubert Handesley's original and lively weekend house parties are deservedly famous. To amuse his guests, he has devised a new form of the fashionable Murder Game, in which a guest is secretly selected to commit a 'murder' in the dark, and everyone assembles to solve the crime. But when the lights go up this time, there is a real corpse....

Neverwhere

Under the streets of London there's a world most people could never even dream of: a city of monsters and saints, murderers and angels, and pale girls in black velvet. Richard Mayhew is a young businessman who is about to find out more than he bargained for about this other London. A single act of kindness catapults him out of his safe and predictable life and into a world that is at once eerily familiar and yet utterly bizarre.

Bookworm. says:"Beautifully Neil Gaiman!"

Publisher's Summary

Roy Smiles' celebration of the 'Beyond the Fringe' team takes a funny and affectionate look at how four young men from Oxbridge changed the face of British comedy. Starring Matt Addis as Alan Bennett, Rory Kinnear as Peter Cook, Jonathan Aris as Jonathan Miller and Benedict Cumberbatch as Dudley Moore. A CPL production for BBC Radio 4.

If you could sum up Good Evening: Behind "Beyond the Fringe" in three words, what would they be?

Good Evening: Beyond the Fringe is a brief, very brief, dramatization of the seminal British comic revue of the early 1960s, Beyond the Fringe. The original show was written and performed by Dudley Moore, Peter Cook, Alan Bennett and Jonathan Miller.

This dramatization uses the decision of the troupe to take their hit London show to New York as the framing device in which to tell the rest of the story, which jumps around chronologically. We're treated to vignettes from each of the performer's growing-up years but in comic tone, as though their adult selves were interpreting their childhoods. These parts are very interesting, almost like short skits.

Roy Smiles, the playwright, has done a good job of introducing us to the young men who created Beyond the Fringe. But I get the feeling that Smiles was working with a radio slot that only gave him 44 minutes to tell a vastly more complicated and intricate story. Which is too bad. Because I wish Smiles had spent two hours unfolding the story of the Fringers--how they met, the creation of their show, the interplay of their characters, the challenges. All that good stuff you can't jam into a small 44-minute program.

All this being said, it's a quick enjoyable listen. Some interesting lines. And now treat yourself and go on youtube and pull up the video of the real guys doing their performance on stage.

Which character – as performed by the narrators – was your favorite?

Benedict Cumberbatch admirably filled the shoes of Dudley Moore. Actually, all the actors did a great job. Just wish they'd had a longer script to work with.

Any additional comments?

If you're like me--an American--you may not be familiar with Beyond the Fringe. I heard it was an influence on Monty Python, which is why I picked up this program. John Cleese has said Dudley Moore and Peter Cook were some of the funniest performers he ever saw.

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